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The more recent experiments with New Public Management, in various
countries, have revealed that there were major differences among
what a number of writers referred to as 'differential application'
of systems and practices. It was suggested that these differences
were a result of environmental considerations. But the major
preoccupation of the earlier literature on New Public Management
was with debates on whether the systems and practices of New Public
Management had achieved success in the developed countries.
Unfortunately, developing countries such as Mexico and countries in
the Caribbean are largely neglected in the current literature.
Policy Transfer, New Public Management and Globalization fills this
gap. Focusing on policy transfer, new public management, and
globalization, the contributors examine the problems and
difficulties in introducing and implementing policies in small,
plural, politically unstable societies.
The reader is given an intimate memoir of Jewish adolescence and
life from a young woman's perspective in an Eastern European shtetl
at the end of the nineteenth century. Hinde Bergner, future mother
of one of Yiddish literature's greatest poets and grandmother of
one of Israel's leading painters, recalls the gradual impact of
modernization on a traditional world as she finds herself caught
between her thirst for a European education and true love, and the
expectations of her traditional family. Written during the late
1930s as a series of episodes mailed to her children, and never
completed due to Bergner's murder at the hand of the Nazis, the
memoir provides details about her teachers and matchmakers,
domestic religion and customs, and the colorful characters that
peopled a Jewish world that is no more. Translated from the Yiddish
and with a critical introduction by Justin Cammy, it is a lively
addition to the library of Jewish women's memoir, and should be of
interest to students of Eastern European Jewish culture and women's
studies.
Over the past four decades Ruth R. Wisse has been a leading scholar
of Yiddish and Jewish literary studies in North America, and one of
our most fearless public intellectuals on issues relating to Jewish
society, culture, and politics. In this celebratory volume, edited
by four of her former students, Wisse's colleagues take as a
starting point her award-winning book "The Modern Jewish Canon"
(2000) and explore an array of topics that touch on aspects of
Yiddish, Hebrew, Israeli, American, European, and Holocaust
literature. "Arguing the Modern Jewish Canon" brings together
writers both seasoned and young, from both within and beyond the
academy, to reflect the diversity of Wisse's areas of expertise and
reading audiences. The volume also includes a translation of one of
the first modern texts on the question of Jewish literature, penned
in 1888 by Sholem Aleichem, as well as a comprehensive bibliography
of Wisse's scholarship. In its richness and heft, "Arguing the
Modern Jewish Canon" itself constitutes an important scholarly
achievement in the field of modern Jewish literature.
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